U.S. patent application number 08/844383 was filed with the patent office on 2001-08-16 for modulation/demodulation of pilot carrier means and method to perform the modulation/demodulation.
Invention is credited to REUSENS, PETER P.F., SPRUYT, PAUL M.P., VAN DER PUTTEN, FRANK O..
Application Number | 20010014101 08/844383 |
Document ID | / |
Family ID | 8229704 |
Filed Date | 2001-08-16 |
United States Patent
Application |
20010014101 |
Kind Code |
A1 |
SPRUYT, PAUL M.P. ; et
al. |
August 16, 2001 |
MODULATION/DEMODULATION OF PILOT CARRIER MEANS AND METHOD TO
PERFORM THE MODULATION/DEMODULATION
Abstract
For synchronisation purposes, a transmitter (TX) multiplexes a
pilot carrier with carriers whereon data elements (DATA) are
modulated, and transmits the pilot carrier together with the
modulated carriers to a receiver (RX). The immunity of the pilot
carrier for interferers, such as radio amateur signals, is improved
by modulating the pilot carrier with a non-constant signal, for
instance a random signal, an alternating signal or even scrambled
data elements (DATA), before transmission thereof. Since
demodulation of the pilot carrier in the receiver (RX) and
averageing successive demodulated pilot carriers reduces the effect
of the interference induced on the non-constantly modulated pilot
carrier, the degradation of the synchronisation between transmitter
(TX) and receiver (RX) is reduced significantly.
Inventors: |
SPRUYT, PAUL M.P.; (PRINSES
LYDIALAAN, BE) ; VAN DER PUTTEN, FRANK O.;
(VINKSTRAAT, BE) ; REUSENS, PETER P.F.; (LAARNE,
BE) |
Correspondence
Address: |
ALFRED A FRESSOLA
WARE FRESSOLA VAN DER SLUYS & ADOLPHSON
755 MAIN STREET
P O BOX 224
MONROE
CT
06468
|
Family ID: |
8229704 |
Appl. No.: |
08/844383 |
Filed: |
April 18, 1997 |
Current U.S.
Class: |
370/419 ;
375/222 |
Current CPC
Class: |
H04L 27/2613 20130101;
H04L 27/261 20130101; H04L 27/2655 20130101; H04L 27/2626
20130101 |
Class at
Publication: |
370/419 ;
375/222 |
International
Class: |
H04L 012/28; H04J
001/16 |
Foreign Application Data
Date |
Code |
Application Number |
Jan 31, 1997 |
EP |
97400221.4 |
Claims
What is claimed is:
1. A method for transmitting data elements (DATA) from a
transmitter (TX) to a receiver (RX), wherein: a. said data elements
(DATA) are modulated on at least one carrier; b. a pilot carrier
used for synchronisation between said transmitter (TX) and said
receiver (RX) is multiplexed with said at least one carrier; c.
said at least one carrier and said pilot carrier are transmitted
over a transmission medium (TM) interconnecting said transmitter
(TX) and said receiver (RX), characterized in that d. said pilot
carrier is modulated with a non-constant signal before it is
transmitted.
2. A method according to claim 1, characterised in that said
non-constant signal is a random or pseudo-random signal.
3. A method according to claim 1, characterised in that said
non-constant signal is an alternating signal, subsequently
alternating between different states of the modulation
constellation.
4. A method according to claim 1, characterised in that said
non-constant signal consists of part of said data elements (DATA)
to be transmitted.
5. A method according to claim 1, characterised in that said
transmitter (TX) and said receiver (RX) constitute a discrete
multitone (DMT) transceiver according to the Asymmetric Digital
Subscriber Line standard T1E1.413.
6. A method according to claim 5, characterised in that said data
elements (DATA) modulated on said pilot carrier are operation
channel data elements or overhead control channel data elements
such as data elements used for maintenance or indicating a
modification of the number of bits modulated on a carrier of said
at least one carrier.
7. A transmitter (TX), adapted to transmit data elements (DATA) to
a receiver (RX) via a transmission medium (TM), said transmitter
(TX) comprising: a. modulation means (MOD) to a first input of
which said data elements (DATA) are applied, said modulation means
(MOD) being adapted to modulate said data elements (DATA) on at
least one carrier, and to multiplex said at least one carrier with
a pilot carrier used for synchronisation between said transmitter
(TX) and said receiver (RX); b. pilot information means (TPT),
adapted to generate information to identify said pilot carrier, and
to apply said information to a second input of said modulation
means (MOD); and c. line interface means (TI), coupled between an
output of said modulation means (MOD) and an input of said
transmission medium (TM), and adapted to condition said at least
one carrier and said pilot carrier to be transmitted over said
transmission medium (TM), characterised in that d. said modulation
means (MOD) is further adapted to modulate said pilot carrier with
a non-constant signal.
8. A receiver (RX), adapted to receive a signal (S') transmitted
thereto by a transmitter (TX) via a transmission medium (TM), said
receiver (RX) comprising: a. line interface means (RI), coupled to
an output of said transmission medium (TM) and adapted to condition
said signal (S') to be applied to components of said receiver (RX);
b. demodulating means (DMOD), an input of which is coupled to an
output of said line interface means (RI), said demodulating means
(DMOD) being adapted to demultiplex in said signal (S') a pilot
carrier from at least one carrier whereon data elements (DATA') are
modulated, and to demodulate said data elements (DATA') from said
at least one carrier; and c. pilot information means (RPT), adapted
to generate information to identify said pilot carrier, and to
apply said information to a second input of said demodulation means
(DMOD), characterised in that d. said demodulating means (DMOD)
further is adapted to demodulate a non-constant signal from said
pilot carrier and to use the demodulated pilot carrier for
synchronisation.
9. A transmission system comprising a transmitter (TX), a receiver
(RX) and a transmission medium (TM), coupled between an output of
said transmitter (TX) and an input of said receiver (RX), said
transmitter (TX) comprising: a. modulation means (MOD) to a first
input of which data elements (DATA) are applied, said modulation
means (MOD) being adapted to modulate said data elements (DATA) on
at least one carrier, and to multiplex said at least one carrier
with a pilot carrier used for synchronisation between said
transmitter (TX) and said receiver (RX); b. pilot information means
(TPT), adapted to generate information to identify said pilot
carrier, and to apply said information to a second input of said
modulation means (MOD); and c. line interface means (TI), coupled
between an output of said modulation means (MOD) and an input of
said transmission medium (TM), and adapted to condition said at
least one carrier and said pilot carrier to be transmitted over
said transmission medium (TM), and said receiver (RX) comprising:
d. line interface means (RI), coupled to an output of said
transmission medium (TM) and adapted to condition a signal (S')
received therefrom to be applied to components of said receiver
(RX); e. demodulating means (DMOD), an input of which is coupled to
an output of said line interface means (RI), said demodulating
means (DMOD) being adapted to demultiplex in said signal (S') said
pilot carrier from said at least one carrier, and to demodulate
data elements (DATA') from said at least one carrier; and f. pilot
information means (RPT), adapted to generate information to
identify said pilot carrier, and to apply said information to a
second input of said demodulation means (DMOD), characterised in
that g. said modulation means (MOD) is further adapted to modulate
said pilot carrier with a non-constant signal; and h. said
demodulating means (DMOD) is adapted to demodulate said nonconstant
signal from said pilot carrier and to use the demodulated pilot
carrier for synchronisation.
Description
[0001] The present invention relates to a method for transmitting
data elements as defined in the non-characteristic part of claim 1,
a transmitter and a receiver as defined in the non-characteristic
part of claims 7 and 8 respectively, and a transmission system as
defined in the non-characteristic part of claim 9.
[0002] Such a method for transmitting data elements, such a
transmitter and receiver, and such a transmission system are
already known in the art, e.g. from the specifications of the ANSI
(American National Standards Institute, Inc.) Standard on ADSL, the
approved version of which has the reference T1E1.413-1995 and title
"Network and Customer Installation Interfaces, Asymmetric Digital
Subscriber Line (ADSL) Metallic Interface". Therein, data elements
are modulated on a set of carriers. In case of discrete multi tone
(DMT) modulation, these carriers have equidistant frequencies. As
is indicated in paragraphs 6.9.1.2 and 7.9.1.2 on pages 46 and 58
of the above cited standard, published in 1995, one of the carriers
is reserved as a pilot carrier. This pilot carrier is used for
synchronisation between transmitter and receiver and is modulated
by a constant signal. In a vector plane, wherein the modulation
constellation is represented by a collection of points, the pilot
carrier is thus represented by a single point. On the transmission
medium, e.g. on a telephone line interconnecting the ADSL
transmitter and ADSL receiver in the known system, the pilot
carrier thus represents a sine or cosine which does not change in
phase, amplitude or frequency in time (in case a guard bond or
cyclic prefix is added whose length does not contain an integer
number of periods of the pilot tone, the pilot tone might be
discontinu at the edges of the DMT symbol).
[0003] A well-known source of norrowbanded or single frequency
disturbances is a radio amateur or an AM radio station, which
broadcasts radio signals at frequencies close to carrier
frequencies. Forward error correction techniques, well-known in the
art, can reduce the effect of such disturbances on data carried by
the affected carriers. An alternative way to protect data against
such interferers, proposed by Peter S. Chow et al. in the article
"A multicarrier E1- HDSL Transceiver System with Coded Modulation"
from the authors Peter S. Chow, Noafal Al-Dhahir, John M. Cioffi
and John A. C. Bingham published in issue No. 3 May/June 1993 of
the Journal of European Transactions on Telecommunications and
Related Technologies (ETT), pages 257-266, is bitswapping: bit and
energy allocations are updated so that the affected carriers carry
less data bits then before. This technique requires an additional
communication between transmitter and receiver.
[0004] Although data transmitted over the telephone line from the
transmitter to the receiver may be protected by one of the above
mentioned techniques, the presence of noise or an interferer, for
instance a radio amateur signals with a frequency in the vicinity
of the frequency of the pilot carrier, may still cause an offset
between the received point representing the pilot carrier in the
above defined vector plane and the expected point. If this offset
in the vector plane is not sufficiently random, it biases the
synchronisation mechanism, resulting in a performance degradation.
This is e.g. the case if the instantaneous phase of the interferer
is very slowly varying in time with respect to the duration of the
DMT symbol or if this interferer is constant.
[0005] It is an object of the present invention to provide a method
for transmitting data elements and related equipment of the known
type, but wherein the immunity of the pilot carrier for
interference is increased significantly, and consequently wherein
the degradation of the synchronisation mechanism between
transmitter and receiver is reduced.
[0006] According to the present invention, this object is achieved
by the method for transmitting data elements defined in claim 1, by
the transmitter and receiver defined in claims 7 and 8
respectively, and by the transmission system defined in claim
9.
[0007] In this way, by modulating the pilot carrier with a
non-constant signal, the pilot carrier appears on the transmission
medium as a sine or cosine with non-constant phase and/or
amplitude. Demodulation of such a pilot carrier at the receiver's
side, re-generates the unmodulated pilot carrier, i.e. a sine or
cosine with non varying phase and/or amplitude from the transmitted
modulated pilot carrier. For interference induced on the modulated
pilot carrier, this demodulation has an averaging effect as will be
explained in more detail later on in the description. The effect of
an interferer on different states of the modulation constellation
is thus averaged by demodulation. The final effect of an interferer
after demodulation is far less than the effect of the interferer on
one single state in the modulation constellation scheme as a result
of which the transmission system according to the present invention
has a significantly increased immunity for narrowband interferers,
compared to the above described known system.
[0008] It is noted that the implementation of the synchronisation
means can be simplified if the constellation points of the pilot
carrier are well chosen, e.g. if all points have the same
amplitude.
[0009] It is further to be noticed that the term "comprising" used
in the claims, should not be interpreted as being limitative to the
means listed thereafter. Thus, the scope of the expression "a
device comprising means A and B" should not be limited to devices
consisting only of components A and B. It means that with respect
to the present invention, the only relevant components of the
device are A and B.
[0010] Similarly, it is to be noted that the term "coupled" also
used in the claims, should not be interpreted as being limitative
to direct connections only. Thus, the scope of the expression "a
device A coupled to a device B" should not be limited to devices or
systems wherein an output of device A is directly connected to on
input of device B. It means that there exists a path between an
output of A and an input of B which may be a path including other
devices or means.
[0011] A remark is also that, in view of the present invention, it
is not important whether the frequency of the pilot carrier is a
fixed one or not. The pilot carrier may change in frequency
whenever the transmitter or receiver concludes that the pilot
frequency is laying within a frequency bond with too much
interference. The transmitter and receiver then have to negotiate a
new pilot tone frequency More details about this technique are
irrelevant in view of the present invention but it is stressed here
that changing the frequency of the pilot tone and modulating the
pilot tone with non-constant signals are two techniques which may
be applied independently to improve interference immunity of the
synchronisation between transmitter and receiver. These techniques
may be used complementary or may be applied separately.
[0012] In a particular implementation of the present invention, the
pilot carrier is modulated as defined in claim 2.
[0013] In this way, by modulating a randomised signal on the pilot
carrier, the state of the pilot carrier in the constellation scheme
will change randomly so that the demodulation will have a good
averaging effect resulting in an increase of the interference
immunity.
[0014] In another implementation of the present invention, the
pilot carrier is modulated with a predefined sequence that ensures
sufficient alternations of the states of the pilot carrier, as
defined in claim 3.
[0015] In this way, if the averaged effect of interference over all
visited states in the constellation scheme is zero after
demodulation, the best results will be obtained in terms of
improvement of the interference immunity. Indeed, when each state
has an equal probability and the constellation has a symmetry
around zero, the effect of interference will be compensated for
completely after demodulation. As an example, the constellation
might contain only two points with the same amplitude but with
opposite phases. Successive pilots would then have alternate
phases.
[0016] It is remarked that the proposed technique con be used
whether or not the predefined sequence is known at the receiver. If
the sequence is unknown, the receiver has to demap the received
pilot, i.e. it has to map the received point on a constellation
point. The decision is then used to generate the unmodulated
pilot.
[0017] In yet another implementation of the present invention, the
pilot carrier is modulated as defined in claim 4.
[0018] This implementation has the additional advantage that it
provides an enlarged bandwidth for transport of data elements.
Indeed, in the already cited ADSL system for instance, the pilot
carrier may be modulated with an 8 kbit/s datastream by allocating
two bits to it. If this additional bandwidth is used for
transporting data elements, the aggregate bitrate between
transmitter and receiver will be increased with an equivalent
amount. It is to be remarked that, to have significant immunity
against interferers, the data elements which are modulated on the
pilot carrier, hove to be sufficiently random so that the pilot
carrier reaches all states in the constellation scheme and a good
averaging of the interference is obtained by demodulation. This can
be obtained by scrambling.
[0019] An additional feature of the present invention is that it
may be applied in the field of ADSL and VDSL as indicated by claim
5.
[0020] Indeed, systems wherein data elements are transmitted over
copper telephone lines such as ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber
Line), VDSL (Very High Bitrate Digital Subscriber Line) or the like
are subjected to interference such as radio amateur signals. It is
therefore likely to protect such systems with the technique
according to the present invention.
[0021] Furthermore, a characteristic feature of the present
invention when applied in the field of ADSL, is defined in claim
6.
[0022] As described in the already mentioned ADSL specification,
the DMT symbols contain user data and overhead data, e.g. operation
channel data or overhead control channel data such as operation and
maintenance commands, vendor specific commands, bit swap
information, and so on. The embedded operations channel (eoc) and
the ADSL overhead control (aoc) channel are described respectively
in paragraphs 11.1 13.1 on pages 71 and 112 of the earlier
mentioned specification. This information may for instance be
modulated on the pilot carrier.
[0023] The above mentioned and other objects and features of the
invention will become more apparent and the invention itself will
be best understood by referring to the following description of an
embodiment taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings
wherein:
[0024] FIG. 1 represents a transmission system including a
transmitter TX and a receiver RX according to the present
invention; and
[0025] FIG. 2 represents a constellation scheme for modulating a
pilot carrier in a particular embodiment of the present invention,
and illustrates the influence of interference induced on the
modulated pilot carrier.
[0026] The transmission system drawn in FIG. 1 includes a first
Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) modem of which only the
transmitting part TX is drawn, a second ADSL modem of which only
the receiving part RX is drawn, and a copper twisted pair telephone
line TM coupling the two ADSL modems. The first ADSL modem may for
instance be located in a remote terminal and modulates data DATA to
be transmitted over the telephone line TM towards the second ADSL
modem which may for instance be located in a central office. Both
ADSL modems respect the specifications of the ADSL Standard
T1E1.413.
[0027] The transmitting part TX of the first ADSL modem contains
between a data input DATA and a signal output S the cascade
connection of a discrete multitone (DMT) modulator MOD and a line
interface TI. In addition, pilot tone identifying means TPT are
included and have an output coupled to an additional input of the
DMT modulator MOD.
[0028] The receiving port RX of the second ADSL modem contains
between a signal input S' and a data output DATA' the cascade
connection of a line interface RI and a discrete multitone (DMT)
demodulator DMOD. In addition, pilot tone identifying means RPT are
included and have an output coupled to an additional input of the
DMT demodulator DMOD.
[0029] In FIG. 1, an embodiment of the transmission system
according to the present invention is thus drawn in terms of
functional blocks: TX, RX, TM, MOD, TI, TPT, RI, DMOD and RPT. The
working of each of these blocks will be described sufficiently
detailed in the following paragraphs. From this functional
description, it will be obvious for a person skilled in the art of
designing telecommunication devices how embodiments of these blocks
can be manufactured with well-known electronic components. A
detailed architecture of the contents of the functional blocks
drown in FIG. 1 hence is not given here.
[0030] In the transmitting part TX of the first ADSL modem, data
DATA are applied to a data input DATA of the modulator MOD to be
modulated thereby on a set of carriers. It is noticed that in FIG.
1, the some reference DATA is used for the incoming data and the
terminal of the modulator MOD where the data are applied to.
Furthermore it is remarked that the applied data DATA may be user
data received from the outside world as well as overhead data, for
instance bit allocation information generated inside the first ADSL
modem. The modulator MOD then performs bit allocation, i.e. the
modulator MOD allocates a certain number of data bits to each one
of the carriers, selects an appropriate modulation type for each
one of the carriers so that the right amount of bits can be
modulated thereon, and then modulates the carriers. The carriers
are transformed from frequency to time domain by the modulator MOD
and extended cyclically so as to minimise intersymbol interference
effects due to transmission over the telephone line TM. The so
obtained symbols, called discrete multitone symbols, contain one
carrier which is assigned to be pilot carrier and which will be
used at the receiver's side for synchronisation. The modulator MOD
modulates this pilot carrier in an alternating way. This means
that, when 2 bits can be modulated on the pilot carrier via 4 QAM
modulation, 4 different states are transmitted in an alternating
way. The 4 states of the 4 QAM modulation technique are drawn in
FIG. 2 and represented there by S1, S2, S3 and S4. Each of these
states corresponds to a sine wave signal on the transmission line
TM, and has its particular phase and amplitude. The frequency of
this sine wave signal is defined by the pilot tone information
means TPT. The pilot tone information means TPT may for example be
a simple register containing on indication of the fixed frequency
of the pilot tone, or alternatively, may be a device negotiating
with the pilot tone information means RPT in the second modem which
frequency will be reserved for the pilot tone. Modulating the pilot
carrier in an alternating way implies that in successive DMT
symbols, the pilot carrier is represented by sine waves S1, S2, S3,
S4, S1, S2, . . . , and so on, or by another (predefined) sequence
that visits all states in an alternating way. This is different
from what is specified in the draft ADSL standard. Therein, the
pilot carrier should be modulated With a constant signal, e.g.
(0,0) which may be represented by the point in the first quadrant
of the earlier mentioned vector plane in case of 4 QAM modulation.
This means that on ADSL modem, operating according to the ADSL
standard, transmits one single sine, S1 for instance, in successive
DMT symbols as the pilot carrier.
[0031] In FIG. 2 it is supposed that a radio amateur signal affects
the pilot tone carrier in the above described embodiment according
to the present invention. The interference component added to the
states S1, S2, S3 and S4 in successive DMT symbols is 11, 12, 13
and 14 respectively. Instead of a sine wove whose amplitude and
phase is determined by the vector P in FIG. 2, the receiver RX thus
receives a sine wave whose amplitude and phase correspond to that
of PI. Similarly, the sine wave received by the receiver RX in
symbols wherein states S2, S3, or S4 are transmitted, differs in
phase and amplitude from the transmitted sine wave in an amount
determined by the respective vectors 12, 13 and 14.
[0032] The affected signal S' enters the receiving part RX of the
central office modem and is applied to the line interface RI to be
conditioned: transmission line coupling, front-end filtering and
analogue to digital conversion for instance are performed with the
appropriate levels of linearity and noise in RI. The conditioned
and digitised signal then is applied to the demodulator DMOD which
equalises the signal in time domain to compensate for intersymbol
interference, which removes the cyclic prefix, converts the time
domain signal into a frequency domain signal via fast fourier
transformation and equalises the signal in frequency domain to
compensate for phase and amplitude errors in the received carriers.
The demodulator DMOD also regenerates the pilot carrier from the
successive states S1, S2, S3, S4. The demodulation thereto leaves
S1 unaffected, rotates S2 in the next DMT symbol over 90 degrees
clockwise, rotates S3 in the next DMT symbol over 180 degrees
clockwise, rotates S4 in the next DMT symbol over 270 degrees
clockwise, and so on. All states are thus rotated to the first
quadrant so that a continuous pilot carrier at the frequency
indicated by the pilot frequency indicating means RPT is
constituted. Due to the interference 11, 12, 13 and 14 induced on
S1, S2, S3 and S4 respectively, the sine wave in successive DMT
symbols representing the pilot carrier, differs in phase and
amplitude from the originally transmitted phase and amplitude
determined by the vector P. When turned back to the first quadrant,
the phase and amplitude of the sine waves received in successive
DMT symbols is given by the vectors P+11, P+12', P+13' and P+14'.
As is seen from FIG. 2, the interference component induced on S1,
i.e. 11, compensates for the interference effect 13' for the
interference effect 14' induced on S4. Regenerating the pilot
carrier in the demodulation DMOD and averageing over successive DMT
symbols thus reduces the effect of the interference, if the pilot
carrier is transmitted over the transmission line TM as a sequence
of alternating modulation states. Theoretically, the pilot carrier
can be regenerated perfectly so that synchronisation between the
transmitter TX and receiver RX is not disturbed by the radio
amateur. As a consequence, the data DATA' can be retrieved by
demodulation of the other carriers in a perfect way.
[0033] A first remark is that, although the signal S in the above
described embodiment is transported over a telephone line TM, the
applicability of the present invention is not restricted by the
transmission medium via which the signal S is transported. In
particular, any connection between the transmitter TX and receiver
RX, e.g. a cable connection, a satellite connection, a radio link
through the air, and so on, may be affected by norrowbanded
interference, and thus can be protected by the method according to
the present invention. The invention also is not only related to
ADSL (Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line) or similar systems
wherein DMT (Discrete Multi Tone) modulation is used. A person
skilled in the art will be able to adopt the above described
embodiment so that it is applicable to any other system wherein a
pilot carrier is transmitted from transmitter TX to receiver RX for
synchronisation purposes. U.S. Pat. No. 5,546,190 for instance
describes an optical communication system wherein a pilot tone is
multiplexed with multiple subcarriers, having frequencies which are
integer multiples of the pilot tone frequency, and U.S. Pat. No.
5,548,344 describes an HDTV system wherein a pilot sine wave signal
is multiplexed with the HDTV carriers.
[0034] Another remark is that the origin of the narrowbanded
interference is of no importance for applicability of the present
invention. Whether the disturbing signals are transmitted by a
radio amateur, as supposed in the above described example, by a
taxi, by the police, or are originating from yet another source is
not relevant. Whenever the transmitter TX expects that the pilot
carrier may be affected by an interferer, he can protect the
synchronisation between transmitter TX and receiver RX by
modulating the pilot carrier.
[0035] It is noticed that in an alternative embodiment, the pilot
tone is modulated randomly instead of in an alternating way. This
means that, referring to FIG. 2, a random sequence of the states
S1, S2, S3 and S4 is transmitted instead of a predetermined
alternating sequence.
[0036] In yet another alternative embodiment, the pilot carrier may
be modulated with scrambled data. Scrambling part of the data DATA
in FIG. 1 has a randomising effect. Such randomised data then may
be modulated on the pilot carrier. Since the states S1, S2, S3 and
S4 will randomly be transmitted, demodulation in the receiver and
averageing will again reduce the effect of the induced
interference. Apparently, the latter embodiment has the advantage
of an increased capacity, since the bandwidth occupied by the pilot
carrier also is used for transmission of data. In case of ADSL
transmission, overhead information such as the aoc-data or eoc-data
may be used to modulate the pilot carrier.
[0037] While the principles of the invention have been described
above in connection with specific apparatus, it is to be clearly
understood that this description is made only by way of example and
not as a limitation on the scope of the invention.
* * * * *